Thanks for your feedback. The purpose of this article is to give everyone as much notice as possible. While I can't guarantee any outcomes, feedback from you and others is always an important part of product planning. By the way, this does not mean that Media SDK will no longer work for Ubuntu, just that issues must be reproducible on CentOS or SLES for full support, bug fixes, etc.

Is this still accurate? I have downloaded an evaluation of Media Server SDK 2015 and its documentation is still claiming support for Ubuntu 12.04. Our product requires Ubuntu and so frankly if Intel is planning on dropping support than I will need to find another option for our product.

The plans in the article are still on track. We recognize this is a significant change and wanted to provide as much advance notice as possible. The current public release for Linux still supports Ubuntu, but it is the last release to do so. It is also the last release which supports 3rd Generation Core/Ivybridge. The next release is still moving to CentOS 7 (then 7.1) and SLES 12.

Going forward, there may be some options for other distros. They will, however, require some work to backport from a generic kernel.org version to a broad range of environments. While we hope to provide the foundation to do this with things like full source for kernel patches but merging the changes will be up to you with very limited support from Intel.

It is actually awesome that you are supporting Red Hat 7/CentOS 7 as we are required to use Red Hat for other reasons, I am currently working on converting the latest release to Red Hat 7 and it is a royal pain, is there any way I could get pre-release or early release kernel modules? It would help me a lot just to see how you guys approached it as I am not a kernel hacker and this is my first time dealing with it.

I am really trying to get the media sdk working under a 3.10 kernel, can someone point me at kernel patches for 3.10? Can you give me alpha access if I buy you beer and sign an agreement saying that I understand its an alpha? Please, anything helps at this point.

Sam - If you are using CentOS 7.0 (which seems to be the case based on your previous post), then the kernel that ships with the CentOS should is the one you need the SDK installation. From your forum post, looks like you got this working too.